Staph is one of the "opportunistic" bacteria, meaning that it is always present on your skin, but can turn into an infection when you get a cut. Sometimes it just finds it's way into a pore and turns into a pimple or boil. Whether or not you get an infection is determined by many factors, one being the condition of your immune system, another being the number of the little critters that get in. Once you get a staph infection you might just as well go to the doctor and get some antibiotics, otherwise it might take a long time to get better and you might just have complications if you don't get medical attention.
Arthritis is not an infection and therefore has no incubation period.
Parasitic infections have the longest incubation period in an intestinal infection. One in particular such as the Giardia infection has an incubation period of one to as many as four weeks.
Incubation period is the period between infection and clinical onset of the disease, and latent period is the time from infection to infectiousness.
The period between infection and symptoms (incubation period) varies from one to seven days.
The incubation period of tonsillitis the time between when you get the infection until it breaks out. The incubation period can last from two up to seven days.
The incubation period -- the time between getting infected and having symptoms -- is one to three weeks for chlamydia in those people who get symptoms. But 80-90% of females and half of males get no symptoms.
The correct spelling is "staph infection." "Staph" is shorthand for staphylococcus, a kind of bacteria.
A yeast infection is caused by a fungus, and staph by a bacterium; but a yeast infection of the skin can cause skin compromise that makes it easier for a staph infection to occur.
Staph
30% of people in the U.S carry staph bacteria in their skin.
Staph is not a typical cause of hepatitis.
No bulimia does not have a incubation period